The temporary injunction comes amid a new record for undocumented migrant families crossing the southern border.

Author:
Oscar Margain

Published:
7:20 PM PDT April 9, 2019

Updated:
8:29 PM PDT April 9, 2019

WESLACO, Texas — An experimental immigration policy by the Trump administration – returning asylum seekers to Mexico for the duration of their immigration proceedings – was halted by a federal judge Monday.

The decision comes amid new data showing a record number of migrant family apprehensions at our southwest border.

U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg’s preliminary injunction comes two months after the Migrant Protection Protocols policy was implemented by the Department of Homeland Security.

Also known as "Remain in Mexico," the MPP was created in response to the surge of asylum seekers arriving at the southern border. It was designed to keep people in Mexico while a U.S. judge determines their asylum eligibility.

MPP was first tested at the California ports of entry before it was enforced in the El Paso sector in Texas.

DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen called for the expansion of MPP to other ports of entry last week.

Seeborg ruled the policy is likely in violation of the law and it does not protect migrants from being returned to “unduly dangerous circumstances.”

President Donald Trump reacted to the news on Twitter saying the rule is “unfair to the U.S.”

Undocumented migrants have a legal right to request asylum once they reach U.S. soil, regardless of where they crossed the border. Some migrants are held in detention centers while others, namely family units, are released with a notice to appear in immigration court.